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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 2/2/21
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B
Welcome
everyone
to
tonight's
city
council
meeting.
We
are
grateful
to
have
you
joining
us
and,
as
you
can
tell,
we
are
still
doing
these
meetings
electronically
due
to
the
practice
of
social
distancing
and
to
make
sure
that
everyone,
you
are
the
our
residents
ourselves
and
our
staff
are
safe
and
remain
safe.
B
B
And
we
encourage
everybody's
participation
in
today's
meeting,
we'll
get
to
the
rules
in
the
decorum
of
public
comment
when
we
get
down
to
that
section.
As
for
now,
we
appreciate
people
joining
with
us
and
tuning
in
to
watch
our
formal
meeting.
I'd
like
to
begin
with
a
moment
of
silence,
as
we
recite
the
pledge
of
allegiance
when
we
are
done,
we
will
turn
back
on
our
audio
and.
B
B
You
well,
let's
try
that
again,
shall
we,
I
think
I
owe
a
dollar
to
the
unmute
yourself
jar.
So
we
are
at
the
public
meetings,
section
public
hearings,
section
of
our
agenda
and
we
do
not
have
any
public
hearings
today
in
our
potential
action
items
we
don't
have
any
there
either.
So
that
brings
us
to
section
d
of
our
agenda,
which
is
comments.
Our
first
agenda
in
this
area
is
questions
to
the
mayor
from
the
city
council.
B
Mendenhall,
okay,
talkative
group
mayor
is
there
anything
you'd
like
to
say
all
right,
and
that
brings
us
to
item
number
two,
which
is
our
comments
to
the
city
council.
This
is
where
I
explain
the
rules
and
decorum
we
are
at
the
general
comment
portion
of
our
agenda
for
comments
about
general
topics
and
not
items
that
were
scheduled
for
hearing
tonight.
B
We
are
accepting
your
comments
through
webex
and
for
those
whose
only
option
is
to
call
in
staff
will
be
monitoring
a
separate
phone
line.
The
city
council
has
always
had
rules
of
decorum
that
are
created
to
help
us
conduct
an
orderly,
efficient
meeting
that
moves
through
the
agenda
and
gives
everyone
the
opportunity
to
have
their
voice
heard.
B
These
rules
are
no
different
than
when
we
are
meeting
in
person
and
are
important
to
create
a
safe
space
where
people
can
feel
the
opportunity
to
provide
their
comments
and
differences
of
opinion,
even
when
we
are
meeting
virtually
in
order
to
achieve
this.
Our
rules
of
decorum
extend
from
the
moment
you
arrive
into
our
virtual
meeting
to
help
facilitate
our
comment
period.
Please
be
respectful,
avoid
yelling
or
making
racial
slurs,
obscene
or
defamatory
remarks
again.
We've
strive
very
hard
to
create
a
space
where
everybody
feels
that
their
voice
can
be
heard.
B
B
B
B
B
If
your
registered
name
doesn't
meet
this
requirement,
our
staff
is
happy
to
chat
with
you
in
the
chat
feature
and
gather
that
information
and
help
get
you
re-registered
if
you're
unable
to
give
a
first
and
last
name
that
meets
the
requirement.
Our
staff
is
also
happy
to
direct
you
to
another
forum
where
you
can
leave
your
message.
Your
message
still
is
important
to
us.
B
B
You're
the
voice
you're,
our
narrator
libby,
stop
still
we'll
be
calling
the
names
of
those
who
wish
to
comment
and
we'll
be
unmuting
your
lines.
Oh
robert's.
Still
here,
though,
if
to
troubleshoot
in
the
chat,
if
anybody
needs
some
help
there,
apparently
I
need
help.
Reading
the
script
once
we
open
public
comment,
libby
will
announce
the
three
names
at
a
time
so
that
people
can
have
some
notice
and
be
prepared
to
speak.
B
If
you
do
not
wish
to
speak,
please
message
our
staff
to
let
them
know
or
when
the
host
states,
your
name,
please
just
let
us
know
that
you're
here
to
listen
when
it
is
your
turn
to
speak.
The
meeting
host
will
unmute
your
line.
Please
state
your
name
and
your
two
minutes
will
begin
at
the
two
minute
mark.
The
host
will
announce
time
and
your
microphone
will
be
muted.
B
Of
course,
if
you
are
unable
to
complete
your
full
comment
within
the
available
time,
please
feel
free
to
mail,
us
at
salt,
lake
city,
council,
p.o
box,
one
four,
five:
four:
seven:
six
salt
lake
city,
eight,
four
one,
one,
four
email
us
at
council.comments
at
slcgov.com,
or
call
us
at
801
535-7654
with
that
I
will
turn
it
over
to
libby
to
announce
our
first
speakers.
Thank
you.
C
Thank
you,
madam
chair,
so
I
our
first
speaker
tonight
will
be
darren
mann,
who
will
be
followed
by
senior
nezeva
and
who
will
be
followed
by
jen
colby.
C
D
I
have
a
homeless
camp
at
our
residence
on
777,
west
500,
north
and
basically
our
mission,
we're
a
food
justice
organization
and
our
mission
is
to
localize
local
food
sources
and
feed
a
three
block
radius
and
build
more
nodes
so
that
we
can
have
a
greener,
healthier
environment,
but
it
became
apparent
to
us,
with
this
homeless
crisis
that
we
needed
to
extend
our
our
property
towards
a
homeless
encampment.
D
The
city
has
been
fairly
cooperative.
However,
I
have
reached
out
to
both
my
council
representative
and
the
mayor
to
have
a
discussion
and
a
meeting
of
solutions
that
we
could
have
addressing
this
homeless
crisis
and
have
yet
to
be
responded
to
which
is
very
upsetting,
as
I'm
here
to
help
you
guys.
I
want
us
to
move
forward
in
a
collaborative
effort,
I'm
working
with
the
nomad
alliance
as
well
as
unsheltered
utah,
to
help
us
in
this
endeavor.
D
I
think
this
is
a
community
effort
and
we
can
create
something
truly
beautiful
with
job
training,
programs,
farming
initiatives,
and
that
is
definitely
where
my
skill
skill
set
falls
in
line
so
that
we
can
start
to
maybe
create
a
camp.
There's
vacant
lands
all
across
salt
lake
county.
I
have
experience
operating
on
vacant
land
and
designing
farms
with
the
green
urban
lunch
box.
D
So
there
is
a
lot
of
precedent
for
progress
to
be
had,
so
I
hope
that
we
can
cultivate
a
spirit
of
collaboration
and
and
find
some
sort
of
solution
towards
the
endeavor
of
solving
this
homeless
crisis.
Is
this
for
the
city
alone?
No,
I
do.
I
do
agree
with
mendenhall
that
this
is
something
that
should
be
shared
across
the
state
as
a
whole,
and
it
is
a
burden
unduly
shared
right
here
in
our
home
city.
D
I
mean
I'm
right
in
the
heart
of
the
city,
so
I
have
been
going
up
to
the
state
legislator
and
talking
with
several
legislators,
but
I
I
just
want
to
know
that
the
door
is
open
and
that
we
can
start
to
move
forward
to
address
this
issue
that
is
currently
plaguing
our
city,
so
that
we
can
find
some
sort
of
solution
to
our
problem.
D
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
service.
Yes,
that's
pretty
much
all
I
have
to
say.
A
Yes,
andrew
my
point
of
personal
privilege,
if
I
might
of
course
darren
if
you're
still
listening,
I
tried
to
leave
a
message
for
you
earlier,
but
your
voicemail's
full.
I
should
have
my
phone
number
on
your
phone,
I'm
hoping
so
feel
free
to
text
or
call
me
back
where
I
can
try
again
later.
C
F
Thank
you
so
much.
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
Thank
you
mayor
mendenhall.
Thank
you
for
all
of
to
all
of
you,
for
all
you
guys
do
to
help
make
our
city
a
better
space.
F
F
Again,
as
I
said
before,
a
lot
of
the
nomads
we
work
with
a
lot
of
the
settlements
are
requesting
regular
trash
pickups.
So
if
there's
any
way,
we
can
work
with
the
city
to
to
come
and
pick
up
the
trash
there
is.
You
know
the
health
department
is
continuing
with
these
abatements
under
the
guise
of
public
health,
and
I
think
the
the
the
number
one
priority
is
to
make
sure
that
the
people
that
are
already
living
out
in
the
streets
can
live
in
a
place
where
there
is
trash
pickup.
F
Maybe
there
is
porter
potties.
We
were
at
a
camp
right
by
the
murals
and
that
trash
can
is
overflowing,
so
whatever
you
guys
can
do
to
kind
of
help,
promote
that
and
also
and
reaching
out
to
and
hope
that
we
can
be.
As
darren
said,
we
can
forge
a
collaborative
effort
to
find
long-term
solutions.
We
would
love
to
work
with
you
guys
to
maybe
get
some
land
and
have
that
land
rezoned
for
a
tiny
home
community.
F
So
there
aren't
some
of
these
issues
that
are
downtown
with
with
you
know
the
blight
and,
and
so
many
tent
cities
popping
up,
but
there's
just
no
place
for
them
to
go.
Also,
we
do
hear
that
there
is
going
to
be
an
abatement
at
last
hope
on
thursday.
I'm
calling
to
see,
if
maybe
that
can
be.
F
Postponed,
just
until
there
is
a
permanent
solution
for
a
place
for
them
to
move,
I
am
afraid
it's
going
to
get
kind
of
ugly
and
that
we've
never
had
150
people
being
forcibly
moved
from
a
space
before
and
also
to
bolster
darren
mann's,
nomad
village.
I
have
seen
the
good
that
that
his
property
is
is
doing
for
people
there
a
lot
of
time
yep.
Thank
you
appreciate
you.
C
G
And
hi
libby
nice
to
talk
to
you
about
virtually
and
the
whole
council.
G
Jen
colby
district
four:
I
wanted
to
make
a
few
quick
comments
specific
to
both
the
housing
situation
in
our
city
and
specifically
to
the
200
south
rezone
petition
that
you
heard
some
about
today
at
the
work
session.
I
know
we
have
a
consent
agreement
issue
our
consent
agenda
to
set
a
public
hearing
in
march,
but
while
it's
fresh
of
mine,
I
wanted
to
make
a
couple
of
quick
comments.
I
also
wanted
to
refer
you
to.
G
G
They,
four
of
the
five
are
contributing
according
to
shippo,
one
has
had
some
across
the
street
from
me
on
lincoln
street
has
had
some
modifications
but
could
be
restored
they're
in
the
east
side,
historic
district.
This
district
is
a
unit.
It
makes
up
it's
comprised
of
all
these
structures
and
the
idea
of
taking
out
five
structures
really
starts
punching
at
the
heart
of
our
historic
districts
and
we
lose
character.
This
is
affordability,
bad
math.
Many
of
us
support,
affordable
housing.
G
These
units
were
super
affordable
and
have
had
30
to
50
residents
as
far
as
we
know
as
individual
structures,
but
you
would
look
right
now.
There
are
nine
of
11
current
legal
units
being
used.
They
could
go
up
to
11.,
taking
out
nine
affordable
units
for
two
supposed.
Affordable
ones
is
just
bad
math,
there's
no
guarantee
the
project
could
go
forward,
they
could
just
cash
out
and
as
a
census,
worker
I've
seen
there's
so
much
vacant
housing,
you're
unaware
of
in
our
city,
there's
other
ways
to
approach
this.
G
So
please
this
please
pay
close
attention
to
this,
we'll
be
giving
more
comments
going
forward.
Thank
you.
H
Okay,
yes,
my
name
is
corey
larson.
I
am
also
a
part
of
the
nomad
alliance.
I
just
wanted
to
speak
on
a
few
things
that
I've
been
seeing
with
going
out
with
the
group
in
the
last
couple
months.
These
abatements
that
we've
been
seeing
have
been
a
huge
issue
because
we're
not
really
seeing
anywhere
for
these
people
to
go,
and
the
fact
that
some
of
these
camps
are
taken
down
and
bulldozed
and
pushing
these
people
out
even
into
deeper
depths
of
the
city
is
is
disheartening.
H
For
me,
I
wanted
to
really
express
the
fact
that,
like
we
need
help
for
these
people,
but
also
we
need
to
have
something
put
into
place
to
where
they
have
multiple
days
notice.
H
Every
time
if
something's
gonna
happen
because
I'm
gonna
get
on
a
personal
level
here
right
now,
I
am
a
veteran
I'm
100
disabled
with
the
military
I
served
in
iraq
and
kuwait
and
honestly,
the
things
that
I'm
seeing
right
now
on
our
streets
are,
unlike
anything
I
have
ever
seen
in
a
third
world
country,
and
it's
just
disheartening,
and
what
darren
has
done
with
his
camp
is
just
next
level
on
providing
what
the
city
is
just
not
able
to
provide
and
should
be
helping
in
this
situation.
H
So
I'm
just
trying
to
you
know
we
we
gotta,
we
gotta
figure
something
out
because
they
keep
moving
like
if
you
guys
take
down
one
camp,
they
move
on
to
another,
and
we
need
to
find
some
form
of
help
for
these
people
in
and
if
they're
going
to
be
going
into
these,
you
know
areas
of
the
city
and
stuff.
H
E
I
also
wanted
on
the
abatements
that
are
upcoming
this
week
I
mean
just
looking
at
the
weather.
I
think
that's
a
super
bad
idea
and
that's
not
the
first
time
I've
seen
this
done,
abatements
directly
before
storms,
you're,
taking
people's
homes
you're,
taking
people's
shelter
away
from
them
right
before
we
get
some
really
bad
weather.
E
That
seems
pretty
inhumane
to
myself
at
least
also.
The
cdc
guidelines
currently
are
to
not
be
having
camp
abatements
because
quote
unquote.
This
can
cause
people
to
disperse
throughout
the
community
and
break
connections
with
service
providers.
This
increases
the
potential
for
infectious
disease
spread.
We
already
have
issues
with
covid
and
we
don't
need
to
be
increasing
that
risk.
Also.
We
might
have
beds
in
the
shelters
currently,
but
there's
a
lot
of
reasons
why
people
don't
want
to
go
there.
It
can
be
really
triggering
for
people
with
mental
health
or
trauma
in
their
backgrounds.
E
Another
reason
is
like
the
spread
of
covet
in
a
shelter
is
much
more
high
because
it's
a
crowded
environment
again
and
if
people
do
have
substance
abuse
issues
there,
then
they
won't
have
access
to
to
anything
potentially
and
can
go
through
withdrawals
and
again
experience
like
really
dangerous
conditions.
So
just
camp
abatements
don't
make
sense
right
now
the
cdc
says
not
to
do
it.
So
if
our
health
department
is
going
out
and
taking
people's
belongings
they're
directly
violating
what
our
federal
government
is
saying,
that
just
doesn't
make
sense.
E
So
I
really
encourage
you
guys
to
look
at
alternatives
and
to
to
I
understand
that
you
do
have
compassion
but
to
really
look
at
this
more
compassionately
and
see
what
we
can
do
instead
of
displacing
people
further
and
and
re-traumatizing
them.
Honestly,
it's
a
it's
a
really
scary
thing:
to
have
all
your
possessions
taken
from
you
and
to
be
bulldozed.
I'm.
C
I
I
This
is
well
seems
like
a
good
idea,
perhaps
to
incentivize
people
to
drive
electric
electric
cars
they're
still,
cars
they're,
still,
cars
that
contribute
to
traffic
problems,
air
pollution
or
sorry.
Pollution
from
the
tire
particles
which
is
from
recent
studies
in
seattle,
show
that
actually
is
a
really
big
deal.
More
cars
downtown,
make
bicycling
and
walking
less
safe.
I
Free
parking
is
really
not
the
solution
at
all,
and
the
blue
parking
kiosks
that
mayor,
becker's
administration
put
in
are
not
being
used
for
surge
pricing
or
any
of
the
other
features
that
would
encourage
people
to
drive
less
and,
in
addition,
just
as
a
comment
to
the
council,
when
that
went
in
it
removed
4
400
places
to
park
bikes
downtown
by
cutting
off
the
all
of
the
parking
meters
and
making
it
impossible
to
lock
a
bike
to
a
parking
meter
anymore.
I
So
salt
lake
really
needs
to
have
deeper
and
better
thinking
on
this,
you
did
a
there
was
a
parking
study
that
was
done
a
few
years
ago
that
was
never
released
by
transportation
or
salt
lake
city's
administration.
That
shows
that
there
is
way
too
much
parking
downtown
as
it
is,
and
so
encouraging
more
people
to
drive
downtown
is
completely
counterintuitive
to
what
this
administration
wants
to
encourage,
which
is
greener
transportation,
and
I
urge
you
to
reject
this
policy
or
to
turn
it
on
its
head
and
figure
out
something
a
lot
better.
I
Also
on
another
topic,
I
don't
know
how
much
time
I
have
left,
but
this
public
utilities
and
the
street
lights.
C
Okay,
our
next
speaker
will
be
soraya,
westfall
and
actually
monica
isn't
here
right
now,
so
following
soraya
will
be
emily.
C
J
Okay,
my
name
is
soraya
westphal,
I'm
a
volunteer
with
the
nomad
alliance,
and
I
I
just
wanted
to
give
you
my
thoughts
on
the
abatements.
I
don't
understand
why.
What
the
reason
is
we're
abating
these
camps
when
they're,
just
gonna
go,
make
a
camp
somewhere
else,
and
I
don't
think
it
solves
anything.
In
fact,
I
think
it
just
makes
things
worse
and
worse
and
worse,
and
I
don't
see
the
point
of
it
also.
J
I
I
think
what
daryn
mann
is
doing
on
his
property
is
commendable,
and
at
least
it
hit
on
his
property,
the
homeless.
There
they
have
more
resources,
they
have
a
garbage.
Can
you
know
they
have
darren's
garbage?
Can
that
they
can
use
to
throw
their
stuff
away
in
all
their
garbage,
rather
than
you
know,
I
mean
I
think
it's
better
than
them
out
on
the
street,
where
they're
just
throwing
their
garbage
on
the
street.
J
J
On
that
end,
so
you
know
continuing
to
move
these
isn't.
C
Gonna,
okay,
so
now
we
will
have
emily
allworth
and
now
we
do
have
monica.
We
are
just
doing
a
little
bit
of
troubleshooting
with
her.
So
I
will
keep
you
posted,
madam
chair,
so.
L
Hello,
I
would
like
to
speak
on
the
camp
abatements,
I
think,
trying
to,
at
the
very
least,
reschedule
the
upcoming
camp
abatement
until
after
the
upcoming
storm.
I
understand
that
the
council
is
differing
from
the
people
who
are
calling
in
an
opinion
on
whether
or
not
camp
abatements
make
sense
right
now.
L
However,
I
think,
for
the
time
being
at
least
pushing
back
this
most
upcoming
camp
abatement
until
after
there
is
a
snowstorm
and
making
sure
that
it
is
safe
for
people
to
not
have
their
belongings
in
giving
people
who
do
not
have
access
to
resources,
limited
amounts
of
time
to
move
all
of
their
belongings.
L
People
end
up,
losing
and
leaving
things
behind
whether
this
is
a
tenth
that
is
a
home
for
a
family,
or
this
is
a
blanket
that
keeps
someone
warm
at
night.
This
can
be
the
difference
between
life
or
death.
We've
lost
too
many
people
to
the
streets
based
on
these
camp
abatements
and
taking
away
people's
belongings,
and
I
believe
that
it
is
inhumane
whether
or
not
we
agree
on
that.
L
I
think
that
this
upcoming
abatement
should
be
postponed
at
the
very
least
until
after
this
weather
has
passed
is
very
cold
out,
and
there
is
just
not
enough
room
in
shelters
for
every
single
person
to
have
a
safe
place.
That
is
warm
for
them
to
sleep
at
night.
We
need
to
postpone
this
most
recent
camp
abatement
and
come
back
to
the
table
and
talk
about
this
afterwards.
L
C
You,
okay,
madame
chair,
we
are
still
working
through
a
technical
issue
with
monica.
She
is
here
and
can
hear
us
we're
just
having
some
audio
issues
with
her
right
now.
If
we
could
just
get
just
a
moment
I'll
see
if
I
can
help
her
get,
it
figured
out.
C
Line
no
she's,
actually
the
last
speaker
for
this
evening.
B
Okay,
why
don't
we
do
this?
Let's
continue
with
council
business
and
as
soon
as
we
have
those
technical
issues
figured
out
then
just
interrupt
me
and
we
will
make
sure
that
her
comment
gets
heard.
B
Let
me
pull
up
my
agenda.
Everyone.
Thank
you
for
those
comments.
We
look
forward
to
the
other
comment
that
hopefully
we'll
be
able
to
figure
out
how
to
allow
or
how
to
get
that
working
for
her
we're
gonna
move
on
for
right
now,
we're
on
to
agenda
item
e,
it's
new
business.
I
item
number
one
is
a
motion
to
meet
remotely
without
an
anchor
location.
B
This.
What
I'd
be
looking
for
is
a
motion
to
ratify
the
determination
that
the
council
will
continue
to
meet
remotely
and
without
an
anchor
location
under
hb5002.
B
A
I
move
the
council
adopt
resolution
extending
wait
hold
on
nope.
I
move
that
the
council
ratify
the
decision
to
continue
to
meet
remotely
without
an
anchor
location.
B
A
A
A
A
B
And
and
council
member
rogers,
yes
and
I'm
a
yes
so
that
passes.
Thank
you.
Our
second
item
of
business
is
a
resolution
adopting
a
resolution
that
would
extend
the
mayor's
march
10
2020
proclamation
declaring
a
local
emergency
relating
to
covet
19.
the
new
date
for
oh
wait.
What
yeah.
So
I
think
it
goes
three
months
out.
I
don't
know
I
can
never
remember
if
we
need
to
put
the
actual
date
in
there,
but
it
would
be
extended
for
three
months.
G
I
just
saw
bobby
posted,
it
does
have
that
date
in
it.
Thank.
B
You
katie
councilmember
wharton.
Did
you
want
to
continue.
A
A
B
A
A
A
B
A
Madam
chair,
I
moved
to
extend
the
mayor's
emergency
declaration
proclamation
regarding
the
march
earthquake
until
may
5th
of
2021.
B
B
E
A
M
M
I
I
can
help
madam
chair
cindy.
What
what
we're
doing
suggesting
this
as
staff
is,
so
that
the
city's
options
are
all
preserved.
So
you
we
still
occasionally
get
new
instructions
from
the
federal
government
about
how
to
handle
things,
and
so,
in
order
not
to
be
limited
in
any
way
and
disadvantage
the
residents
of
the
city.
The
idea
is
to
continue
that
to
just
allow.
If,
if
the
federal
government
does
change
anything,
then
the
city
can
adapt
and
and
take
full
advantage
of
the
opportunities
afforded
by
the
federal
government.
M
So
it's
really
sort
of
a
belt
and
suspenders
type
of
approach
and
the
council
can
rescind
it
at
any
time
so
just
sort
of
a
safety
net.
That's
all.
B
A
A
A
B
And
I
am
a
yes
so
that
passes
unanimously
our
fourth
emergency
declaration.
Can
I
just
point
out
that
we
have
that
many
emergency
declarations
it's
a
tough
year.
Our
fourth
emergency
declaration
is
a
resolution
that
would
extend
the
mayor's
september.
8
2020
proclamation
declaring
a
local
emergency
relating
to
the
wind
storm.
A
B
A
A
B
Thank
you,
councilmember
rogers,
yes,
and
I
am
a
yes
that
also
passes
unanimously.
We
I
will.
I
just
got
noticed
that
libby
is
back
with
monica,
who
we
wanted
to
make
sure,
given
technical
issues
that
she
had
an
opportunity
to
address
the
council
so
libby.
If
we
are
good
to
go,
I
will
turn
it
over
to
you.
C
M
Oh,
thank
you.
It's
been
very
frustrating,
so
I
just
wanted
to
talk
about
the
afternoon
session
where
chowi
hoy
talked
about
the
zoning
map
and
master
plan,
amendment
for
159,
south
lincoln,
9489,
east
955,
east
959,
east
963,
east
and
200
south,
and
I
just
wanted
to
note
that.
M
When
miss
royce
was
asked
whether
there
was
any
historic
significance
to
the
building,
she
said
no
and
when
asked
when
they
were
built,
she
said
around
1918.
M
Many
residents
in
the
neighborhood
worked
very
hard
to
put
all
this
information
in,
and
this
information
was
also
collected
in
the
1980s,
because
the
neighborhood
tried
to
get
a
local
historic
designation
for
the
neighborhood,
I'm
sure
the
application
is
somewhere
in
the
city
records.
Our
neighborhood
is
the
most
densely
populated
outside
of
central
city,
and
the
master
plan
specifically
retained
the
r2
zoning
because
of
this
and
the
well-preserved
inner
courts
lined
with
small
cottages
dating
from
the
beginning
of
the
20th
century.
M
M
Nothing
has
changed
and
miss
willy
said
that
the
miss
hoy
said
that
the
tenants
had
left.
They
were,
in
fact
evicted
during
a
pandemic,
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
make
note
of
that.
Thank
you.
B
Thank
you,
libby
and
before
I
get
to
the
consent
agenda,
I'm
just
going
to
take
a
moment
of
personal
privilege.
I
really
want
to
thank
all
of
this
staff.
I
probably
do
this
a
lot,
but
libby
it
was
new
at
running
the
behind
the
scenes.
I
will
tell
you.
I
tried
to
set
up
a
zoom
meeting
with
three
people
the
other
day
and
still
couldn't
figure
it
out.
B
So
our
staff
over
these
last
10
or
so
months
of
probably
almost
close
to
a
year
now
have
worked
tirelessly
to
to
do
all
of
that.
Behind
the
scenes.
B
Work
and
libby
was
our
narrator
for
today
for
the
first
time
and
you
she
did
an
excellent
job
and
I
just
really
want
to
give
a
huge
shout
out
to
the
work
that
they
have
to
do
to
make
these
meetings
happen
and
the
tweaks
that
they
do
every
time
there
is
a
a
commenter
who
complains
or
says
something
that
they
had
a
hard
time
our
staff
gets
on
it
and
tries
to
fix
it
immediately,
and
so
just
a
big,
a
big
round
of
applause,
our
our
team.
So
thank
you
with
that.
B
We
are
on
to
agenda
item
g,
the
consent
item
the
consent
portion
of
our
agenda,
which
includes
setting
dates
for
upcoming
public
hearings,
approving
a
few
board
appointments
and.
B
I
wanted
to
provide
a
a
little
more
information
about
the
grant
holding
account
item
g4.
These
are
grant
applications
that
have
already
had
a
public
hearing,
and
the
funds
need
to
be
released
from
the
city's
grant
account.
The
items
included
included.
Excuse
me
in
this
batch
tonight
are
grant
funds
for
the
halfway
houses
and
parole,
violator,
centers,
homeless,
shelter,
cities,
mitigation
from
department
of
workforce
services,
an
emergency
medical
services
grant
from
the
state
department
of
ut
of
health
and
jordan
river
vegetation
improvement
at
the
2100
south
oxford
restoration
project.